22 results match your criteria: "School of Public Health University of Sydney[Affiliation]"

Background: Processes of self-reflection and the learning they allow are crucial before, during, and after acute emergencies, including infectious disease outbreaks. Tools-such as Action Reviews-offer World Health Organization (WHO) member states a platform to enhance learning. We sought to better understand the value of these tools and how they may be further refined and better used.

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Article Synopsis
  • Updated data on chronic respiratory diseases (CRDs) are essential for preventing and controlling these conditions as part of achieving the UN's goal of reducing premature mortality from non-communicable diseases by 2030.
  • From 1990 to 2019, global, regional, and national estimates were analyzed for various CRDs, including COPD and asthma, to assess their impact on mortality, disability, and overall prevalence.
  • In 2019, CRDs resulted in 4 million deaths and 454.6 million cases worldwide, with conditions like COPD being the leading cause of death among CRDs, despite a decline in age-standardized rates for most diseases over the period analyzed.
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Influenza-like illness (ILI) and severe acute respiratory infection (SARI) case recruitment tools from 10 countries were reviewed. The contents of the existing tools were compared against World Health Organization's current guidelines, and we also assessed the content validity (accuracy, completeness and consistency). Five of the ILI tools and two of the SARI tools were rated as having high accuracy against WHO case definitions.

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Muscle weakness has been recognized as a hallmark feature of vitamin D deficiency for many years. Until recently, the direct biomolecular effects of vitamin D on skeletal muscle have been unclear. Although in the past, some reservations have been raised regarding the expression of the vitamin D receptor in muscle tissue, this special issue review article outlines the clear evidence from preclinical studies for not only the expression of the receptor in muscle but also the roles of vitamin D activity in muscle development, mass, and strength.

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Climate change is a significant global health threat that is, underpinned by the existing issue of gender inequality. A scoping review was conducted to better understand the relationship between climate change and women's health. We found a notably higher proportion of existing studies focused on low- and middle-income countries (LMICs).

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Mild cognitive impairment in Aboriginal Australians.

Alzheimers Dement (N Y)

August 2020

Neuroscience Research Australia Sydney New South Wales Australia.

Introduction: Aboriginal Australians have among the highest rates of dementia worldwide, yet no study has investigated the subtypes, risk factors, or longer term outcomes of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) in this population.

Methods: A total of 336 community-dwelling Aboriginal Australians aged ≥60 years participated in a longitudinal study, completing a structured interview at baseline. MCI (amnestic subtype, aMCI; non-amnestic subtype, naMCI) and dementia were diagnosed via cognitive screening, medical assessment, and clinical consensus.

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Cocoa production is the major contributor to livelihoods for farming families that constitute nearly two-thirds of the population of the Autonomous Region of Bougainville, a Province in Papua New Guinea (PNG). These families, living mostly in subsistence poverty as a result of the Bougainville Civil War (1988-98), have significantly reduced cocoa production. Efforts to rebuild the industry have not been realised, due to known agricultural factors such as labour shortages, pests and diseases, poor support for farmers from trained agricultural extension officers and inefficient cocoa supply chains.

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Background: Although sleep duration is a risk factor for obesity in young children, less is known about other aspects of sleep health, including bedtime, on obesity risk.

Objective: To determine whether bedtime is associated with body mass index (BMI) z-score or obesity risk in children ages 2 to 5 years, and to determine if associations are independent of sleep duration.

Methods: Cohort analyses were undertaken using three early life obesity prevention trials (POI, INSIGHT, Healthy Beginnings) and a longitudinal cohort study (HOME).

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Background And Objectives: Little is known about the effect of changes in dialysis hours on patient-reported outcome measures. We report the effect of doubling dialysis hours on a range of patient-reported outcome measures in a randomized trial, overall and separately for important subgroups.

Design, Setting, Participants, & Measurements: The A Clinical Trial of IntensiVE Dialysis trial randomized 200 participants to extended or standard weekly hours hemodialysis for 12 months.

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Article Synopsis
  • A study aimed to assess nurses' attitudes and training regarding diabetes care in Saudi Arabia, highlighting significant gaps in knowledge and training.
  • Conducted in 2016, the research involved 1,695 nurses at King Fahad Medical City using a specific attitude scale for evaluation.
  • Findings revealed that many nurses lacked formal training in diabetes management, recognized its psychological impacts, but had a low understanding of its seriousness and the importance of meticulous self-care in patients.
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Background Little is known about the prognostic implications of frailty, a state of susceptibility to stressors and poor recovery to homeostasis in older people, after myocardial infarction ( MI ). Methods and Results We studied 3944 MI patients aged ≥65 years treated at 41 Australian hospitals from 2009 to 2016 in the CONCORDANCE ( Australian Cooperative National Registry of Acute Coronary Care, Guideline Adherence and Clinical Events ) registry. Frailty index ( FI ) was determined using the health deficit accumulation method.

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Older cancer patients in cancer clinical trials are underrepresented. Systematic literature review of almost 5000 meta- and pooled analyses of phase III randomized trials of survival from breast, prostate and lung cancer.

Cancer Epidemiol

December 2017

Menzies Centre for Health Policy, Sydney School of Public Health University of Sydney, Australia; School of Public Health and Community Medicine, University of New South Wales, Australia. Electronic address:

Background: Older people represent increasing proportions of the population with cancer. To understand the representivity of cancer treatments in older people, we performed a systematic literature review using PRISMA guidelines of the age distribution of clinical trial participants for three leading cancer types, namely breast, prostate, and lung.

Methods: We used PubMed to identify articles detailing meta or pooled-analyses of phase III, randomised controlled trials (RCTs) of survival for breast, prostate and lung cancer, published ≤5 years from 2016.

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Ethical use of the media by psychiatrists: towards an antipodean formulation of the "Goldwater Rule".

Australas Psychiatry

February 2016

Professor Emeritus, Department of Psychiatry, University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC, and; Honorary Senior Psychiatrist, St Vincent's Hospital, Fitzroy, VIC, Australia.

Objectives: To review the ethical problems posed by the participation of psychiatrists in various forms of lay media and propose a method of resolving quandaries in this area.

Conclusions: We review the potential ethical problems that arise when psychiatrists make contributions to the lay media, particularly when commentary and opinion reflects the views of the individual rather than the profession. The issues raised by the North American injunction known as the "Goldwater Rule" are pertinent to Australasia, particularly when media statements made by psychiatrists may seem to diminish the profession through politicisation, polemic, or bringing the profession and the field into disrepute.

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The use of subgroups based on biological-clinical and socio-demographic variables to deal with population heterogeneity is well-established in public policy. The use of subgroups based on preferences is rare, except when religion based, and controversial. If it were decided to treat subgroup preferences as valid determinants of public policy, a transparent analytical procedure is needed.

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The authors' reply.

Transplantation

September 2014

1 Department of Renal Medicine Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital Perth, Western Australia Australia 2 Sydney School of Public Health University of Sydney New South Wales, Australia 3 Centre for Kidney Research The Children's Hospital at Westmead New South Wales, Australia 4 Centre for Transplant and Renal Research Westmead Hospital New South Wales, Australia Address correspondence to: Wai H. Lim, M.D., Department of Renal Medicine, Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital, Hospital Avenue, Perth, 6009 Australia.

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Response.

Med Sci Sports Exerc

November 2014

School of Human Movement Studies The University of Queensland St. Lucia, Queensland, Australia School of Public Health University of Sydney Sydney, Australia.

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Back to the PICU: who is at risk and outcome of unplanned readmissions.

Crit Care Med

December 2013

Center of the Child and Adolescent Hospital Cuf Porto; and Departamento das Ciências da Informação e Decisão em Saúde CINTESIS, Faculdade de Medicina Universidade do Porto Porto, Portugal Screening and Test Evaluation Program School of Public Health University of Sydney Sydney, NSW, Australia.

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Is it time to abandon paper? The use of emails and the Internet for health services research--a cost-effectiveness and qualitative study.

J Eval Clin Pract

October 2013

Project Manager and Doctoral Candidate Research Assistant Professor and Director, Menzies Centre for Health Policy, School of Public Health University of Sydney, The University of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia Professor and Director, Uclinic, Surry Hills, New South Wales, Australia.

Rationale: A multidisciplinary primary care clinic in Sydney, Australia, was planning to use electronic questionnaires to measure patient-reported outcomes.

Methods: Semi-structured interviews with 20 patients were undertaken to explore, among other things, practical issues regarding different questionnaire formats. The response rates and costs of email versus postal invitations were also evaluated.

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Background: Cancer is a major cause of mortality and morbidity in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). In patients without kidney disease, screening is a major strategy for reducing the risk of cancer and improving the health outcomes for those who developed cancers by detecting treatable cancers at an early stage. Among those with CKD, the effectiveness, the efficacy and patients' preferences for cancer screening are unknown.

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Hepatitis B prevention and control: Lessons from the East and the West.

World J Hepatol

February 2011

Monica C Robotin, NSW Cancer Council, School of Public Health University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2011, Australia.

Despite being ten times more common than HIV infection, viral hepatitis has so far not commanded the same public health response worldwide, so a global viral hepatitis treatment program is still a long way from becoming a reality. However, much progress has occurred over the last few decades, with the screening of blood products, sound infection control practices and the introduction of disposable needles and syringes leading to significant reductions in nosocomial hepatitis B transmission in the developed world and increasingly in other countries. The introduction of hepatitis B vaccination in the 1980s and its integration into the Expanded Immunization Program have led to substantial reductions in chronic hepatitis B infection rates in children and to millions of lives saved.

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